Most battery chemistries allow serial and parallel configuration. It is important to use the same battery type with equal capacity throughout and never mix different makes, sizes or from different pairs. A weaker cell causes an imbalance. This is especially critical in a serial configuration and a battery is only as strong as the weakest link.
Imagine a chain with strong and weak links. This chain can pull a small weight but when the tension rises, the weakest link will break. The same happens when connecting cells with different capacities in a battery. The weak cells may not quit immediately but get exhausted more quickly than the strong ones when in continued use. On charge, the low cells fill up before the strong ones and get hot; on discharge the weak are empty before the strong ones and they are getting stressed.
This is why it is important to mark your batteries into pairs and always use those two batteries together, never mixing them with others. I use a felt pen and mark mine with an "A" or "B" and so on each time I get a new set.
http://batteryuniversity.com/learn/article/serial_and_parallel_battery_configurations
Imagine a chain with strong and weak links. This chain can pull a small weight but when the tension rises, the weakest link will break. The same happens when connecting cells with different capacities in a battery. The weak cells may not quit immediately but get exhausted more quickly than the strong ones when in continued use. On charge, the low cells fill up before the strong ones and get hot; on discharge the weak are empty before the strong ones and they are getting stressed.
This is why it is important to mark your batteries into pairs and always use those two batteries together, never mixing them with others. I use a felt pen and mark mine with an "A" or "B" and so on each time I get a new set.
http://batteryuniversity.com/learn/article/serial_and_parallel_battery_configurations
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